INTERNET-DRAFT draft-ietf-webdav-acl-08 Expires November 7, 2002 |
Geoffrey Clemm, Rational Software Anne Hopkins, Microsoft Corporation Eric Sedlar, Oracle Corporation Jim Whitehead, U.C. Santa Cruz
|
WebDAV Access Control Protocol
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.
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Abstract
This document specifies a set of methods, headers, and message bodies that define Access Control extensions to the WebDAV Distributed Authoring Protocol. This protocol permits a client to read and modify access control lists that instruct a server whether to allow or deny operations upon a resource (such as HTTP method invocations) by a given principal.
This document is a product of the Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) working group of the Internet Engineering Task Force. Comments on this draft are welcomed, and should be addressed to the acl@webdav.org mailing list. Other related documents can be found at http://www.webdav.org/acl/, and http://www.ics.uci.edu/pub/ietf/webdav/.
Table of Contents
3.7 DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set
Privilege
3.10 Aggregation
of Predefined Privileges
5.1.1 Example: Retrieving DAV:owner
5.1.2 Example: An Attempt to Set
DAV:owner
5.2 DAV:supported-privilege-set
5.2.1 Example: Retrieving a List of
Privileges Supported on a Resource
5.3 DAV:current-user-privilege-set
5.3.1 Example: Retrieving the User's
Current Set of Assigned Privileges
5.4.5 Example: Retrieving a Resource's
Access Control List
5.6.1 Example: Retrieving
DAV:acl-semantics
5.7 DAV:principal-collection-set
5.7.1 Example: Retrieving
DAV:principal-collection-set
5.8 Example:
PROPFIND to retrieve access control properties
6.1.1 DAV:first-match ACE Combination
6.1.2 DAV:all-grant-before-any-deny ACE
Combination
6.1.3 DAV:specific-deny-overrides-grant
ACE Combination
6.2.1 DAV:deny-before-grant ACE
Ordering
6.3.1 DAV:principal-only-one-ace ACE
Constraint
6.3.2 DAV:grant-only ACE Constraint
6.3.3 DAV:no-invert ACE Constraint
6.3.4 DAV:no-acl-inherit ACE Constraint
7 Access Control and
Existing Methods
8.1.3 Example: ACL method failure due to
protected ACE conflict
8.1.4 Example: ACL method failure due to an
inherited ACE conflict
8.1.5 Example: ACL method failure due to an
attempt to set grant and deny in a single ACE.
9.2 DAV:acl-principal-prop-set
Report
9.2.1 Example: DAV:acl-principal-prop-set
Report
9.3 DAV:principal-match
REPORT
9.3.1 Example: DAV:principal-match REPORT
9.4 DAV:principal-property-search
REPORT
9.4.2 Example: successful
DAV:principal-property-search REPORT
9.4.3 Example: Unsuccessful
DAV:principal-property-search REPORT
9.5 DAV:principal-search-property-set
REPORT
9.5.1 Example:
DAV:principal-search-property-set REPORT
11 Internationalization
Considerations
12.1 Increased
Risk of Compromised Users
12.2 Risks
of the DAV:read-acl and DAV:current-user-privilege-set Privileges
12.3 No
Foreknowledge of Initial ACL
19.1 WebDAV
XML Document Type Definition Addendum
The goal
of the WebDAV access control extensions is to provide an interoperable
mechanism for handling discretionary access control for content and metadata
managed by WebDAV servers. WebDAV
access control can be implemented on content repositories with security as
simple as that of a UNIX file system, as well as more sophisticated
models. The underlying principle of
access control is that who you are determines what operations you can perform
on a resource. The “who you are” is defined by a “principal” identifier; users,
client software, servers, and groups of the previous have principal
identifiers. The “operations you can perform” are determined by a single
“access control list” (ACL) associated with a resource. An ACL contains a set of “access control
entries” (ACEs), where each ACE specifies a principal and a set of privileges
that are either granted or denied to that principal. When a principal submits
an operation (such as an HTTP or WebDAV method) to a resource for execution,
the server evaluates the ACEs in the ACL to determine if the principal has
permission for that operation.
Since
every ACE contains the identifier of a principal, client software operated by a
human must provide a mechanism for selecting this principal. This specification
uses http(s) scheme URLs to identify principals, which are represented as
WebDAV-capable resources. There is no guarantee that the URLs identifying
principals will be meaningful to a human. For example,
http://www.dav.org/u/256432 and http://www.dav.org/people/Greg.Stein are both
valid URLs that could be used to identify the same principal. To remedy this,
every principal resource has the DAV:displayname property containing a
human-readable name for the principal.
Since a
principal can be identified by multiple URLs, it raises the problem of
determining exactly which principal's operations are being described in a given
ACE. It is impossible for a client to determine that an ACE granting the read
privilege to http://www.dav.org/people/Greg.Stein also affects the principal at
http://www.dav.org/u/256432. That is, a client has no mechanism for determining
that two URLs identify the same principal resource. As a result, this specification requires clients to use just one
of the many possible URLs for a principal when creating ACEs. A client can
discover which URL to use by retrieving the DAV:principal-URL property (Section
4.2) from a principal resource. No matter which of the
principal's URLs is used with PROPFIND, the property always returns the same
URL.
Once a
system has hundreds to thousands of principals, the problem arises of how to
allow a human operator of client software to select just one of these
principals. One approach is to use broad collection hierarchies to spread the
principals over a large number of collections, yielding few principals per
collection. An example of this is a two level hierarchy with the first level
containing 36 collections (a-z, 0-9), and the second level being another 36,
creating collections /a/a/, /a/b/, ..., /a/z/, such that a principal with last
name “Stein” would appear at /s/t/Stein. In effect, this pre-computes a common
query, search on last name, and encodes it into a hierarchy. The drawback with
this scheme is that it handles only a small set of predefined queries, and
drilling down through the collection hierarchy adds unnecessary steps (navigate
down/up) when the user already knows the principal's name. While organizing
principal URLs into a hierarchy is a valid namespace organization, users should
not be forced to navigate this hierarchy to select a principal.
This
specification provides the capability to perform substring searches on a small
set of properties on the resources representing principals. This permits
searches based on last name, first name, user name, job title, etc. Two
separate searches are supported, both via the REPORT method, one to search
principal resources, the other to determine which properties may be searched at
all.
Once a
principal has been identified in an ACE, a server evaluating that ACE must know
the identity of the principal making a protocol request, and must validate that
that principal is who they claim to be, a process known as authentication. This
specification intentionally omits discussion of authentication, as the HTTP
protocol already has a number of authentication mechanisms [RFC2617]. Some authentication mechanism (such as HTTP
Digest Authentication, which all WebDAV compliant implementations are required
to support) must be available to validate the identity of a principal.
The following issues are out of scope for this document:
·
Access
control that applies only to a particular property on a resource (excepting the
access control properties DAV:acl and DAV:current-user-privilege-set), rather
than the entire resource,
·
Role-based
security (where a role can be seen as a dynamically defined group of
principals),
·
Specification
of the ways an ACL on a resource is initialized,
·
Specification
of an ACL that applies globally to all resources, rather than to a particular
resource.
·
Creation
and maintenance of resources representing people or computational agents
(principals), and groups of these.
This
specification is organized as follows. Section 1.1 defines key concepts used throughout the
specification, and is followed by a more in-depth discussion of principals
(Section 2), and privileges (Section 3). Properties defined on principals are specified in
Section 4, and access control properties for content resources
are specified in Section 5. The semantics of access control lists are described
in Section 6, including sections on ACE combination (Section 6.1), ACE ordering (Section 6.2), and principals required to be present in an ACE
(Section 6.3.2). Client discovery of access control capability using
OPTIONS is described in Section 7.1. Interactions between access control functionality
and existing HTTP and WebDAV methods are described in the remainder of Section 7. The access control setting method, ACL, is specified
in Section 8. Four reports that provide limited server-side
searching capabilities are described in Section 9. Sections on XML processing (Section 10), Internationalization considerations (Section 11), security considerations (Section 12), and authentication (Section 13) round out the specification. An appendix (Section 19.1) provides an XML Document Type Definition (DTD) for
the XML elements defined in the specification.
This draft uses the terms defined in HTTP [RFC2616] and WebDAV [RFC2518]. In addition, the following terms are defined:
principal
A “principal” is
a distinct human or computational actor that initiates access to network
resources. In this protocol, a
principal is an HTTP resource that represents such an actor.
group
A “group” is a principal that represents a set of other principals.
privilege
A “privilege” controls
access to a particular set of HTTP operations on a resource.
aggregate privilege
An “aggregate privilege” is a privilege that contains a set of other privileges.
abstract privilege
The modifier “abstract”, when applied to a privilege, means the privilege cannot be set in an access control element (ACE).
access control list (ACL)
An “ACL” is a list of access control elements that define access control to a particular resource.
access control element (ACE)
An “ACE” either grants or denies a particular set of (non-abstract) privileges for a particular principal.
inherited ACE
An “inherited ACE” is an ACE that is dynamically shared from the ACL of another resource. When a shared ACE changes on the primary resource, it is also changed on inheriting resources.
protected property
A “protected property” is one whose value cannot be updated except by a method explicitly defined as updating that specific property. In particular, a protected property cannot be updated with a PROPPATCH request.
The augmented BNF used by this document to describe protocol elements is described in Section 2.1 of [RFC2616]. Because this augmented BNF uses the basic production rules provided in Section 2.2 of [RFC2616], those rules apply to this document as well.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
Definitions of XML elements in this document use XML element type declarations (as found in XML Document Type Declarations), described in Section 3.2 of [REC-XML]. When an XML element type in the "DAV:" namespace is referenced in this document outside of the context of an XML fragment, the string "DAV:" will be prefixed to the element type.
A principal is a network resource
that represents a distinct human or computational actor that initiates access
to network resources. Users and groups are represented as principals in many
implementations; other types of principals are also possible. A URI of any
scheme MAY be used to identify a principal resource. However, servers
implementing this specification MUST expose principal resources at an http(s)
URL, which is a privileged scheme that points to resources that have additional
properties, as described in Section 4. So, a principal resource can have multiple URIs, one
of which has to be an http(s) scheme URL. Although an implementation SHOULD
support PROPFIND and MAY support PROPPATCH to access and modify information
about a principal, it is not required to do so.
A principal resource may be a
group. A group is represented as a
WebDAV collection, where the members of the group are members of the WebDAV
collection. If a person or
computational agent matches a principal resource that is a member of a group,
they also match the group. Membership in a group is recursive, so if a
principal is a member of group GRPA, and GRPA is a member of group GRPB, then
the principal is also a member of GRPB.
Implementer's Note: It is possible
for the collection that represents a group to have non-principals as collection
members. When enumerating the membership of a group, it is necessary to
retrieve the DAV:resourcetype property of a collection member, and check it for
the DAV:principal XML element (described in Section 4). If the DAV:principal XML element is not present,
the resource is not a principal and may be ignored for the purposes of
determining group membership.
For example, the collection /FOO/,
representing a group, has two members, Bar and Baz. Bar is a principal but Baz
is not. Therefore when determining which principals belong to the group, a
client would enumerate the membership using PROPFIND while asking for the
DAV:resourcetype property, and see that only Bar has the DAV:principal XML
element. Therefore, Bar is the only principal that is a member of the group
represented by /FOO/.
Ability to perform a given method
on a resource SHOULD be controlled by one or more privileges. Authors of protocol extensions that define
new HTTP methods SHOULD specify which privileges (by defining new privileges,
or mapping to ones below) are required to perform the method. A principal with no privileges to a resource
SHOULD be denied any HTTP access to that resource, unless the principal matches
an ACE constructed using the DAV:all, DAV:authenticated, or DAV:unauthenticated
pseudo-principals (see Section 5.4.1).
Privileges may be containers of
other privileges, in which case they are termed aggregate privileges. If a principal is granted or denied an
aggregate privilege, it is semantically equivalent to granting or denying each
of the aggregated privileges individually.
For example, an implementation may define add-member and remove-member
privileges that control the ability to add and remove an internal member of a
group. Since these privileges control
the ability to update the state of a group, these privileges would be
aggregated by the DAV:write privilege on a group, and granting the DAV:write
privilege on a group would also grant the add-member and remove-member privileges.
Privileges may have the quality of
being abstract, in which case they cannot be set in an ACE. Aggregate
and non-aggregate privileges are both capable of being abstract. Abstract
privileges are useful for modeling privileges that otherwise would not be exposed
via the protocol. Abstract privileges also provide server implementations with
flexibility in implementing the privileges defined in this specification. For example, if a server is incapable of
separating the read resource capability from the read ACL capability, it can
still model the DAV:read and DAV:read-acl privileges defined in this
specification by declaring them abstract, and containing them within a
non-abstract aggregate privilege (say, read-all) that holds DAV:read, and
DAV:read-acl. In this way, it is possible to set the aggregate privilege,
read-all, thus coupling the setting of DAV:read and DAV:read-acl, but it is not
possible to set DAV:read, or DAV:read-acl individually. Since aggregate
privileges can be abstract, it is also possible to use abstract
privileges to group or organize non-abstract privileges. Privilege containment
loops are not allowed, hence a privilege MUST NOT contain itself. For example,
DAV:read cannot contain DAV:read.
The set of privileges that apply to
a particular resource may vary with the DAV:resourcetype of the resource, as
well as between different server implementations. To promote interoperability, however, this specification defines
a set of well-known privileges (e.g. DAV:read, DAV:write, DAV:read-acl, DAV:write-acl,
DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set, and DAV:all), which can at least be used
to classify the other privileges defined on a particular resource. The access
permissions on null resources (defined in [RFC2518], Section 3) are solely
those they inherit (if any), and they are not discoverable (i.e., the access
control properties specified in Section 5 are not defined on null resources). On the transition
from null to stateful resource, the initial access control list is set by the
server's default ACL value policy (if any).
Server implementations MAY define
new privileges beyond those defined in this specification. Privileges defined
by individual implementations MUST NOT use the DAV: namespace, and instead
should use a namespace that they control, such as an http scheme URL.
The read privilege controls methods
that return information about the state of the resource, including the
resource's properties. Affected methods include GET and PROPFIND. Any implementation-defined privilege that
also controls access to GET and PROPFIND must be aggregated under dav:read—if
an ACL grants access to dav:read, the client may expect that no other privilege
needs to be granted to have access to GET and PROPFIND. Additionally, the read privilege MAY control
the OPTIONS method.
<!ELEMENT read EMPTY>
The write privilege controls
methods that lock a resource or modify the content, dead properties, or (in the
case of a collection) membership of the resource, such as PUT and
PROPPATCH. Note that state modification
is also controlled via locking (see section 5.3 of [WEBDAV]), so effective
write access requires that both write privileges and write locking requirements
are satisfied. Any implementation-defined
privilege that also controls access to methods modifying content, dead
properties or collection membership must be aggregated under dav:write, e.g. if
an ACL grants access to dav:write, the client may expect that no other
privilege needs to be granted to have access to PUT and PROPPATCH.
<!ELEMENT write EMPTY>
The
DAV:write-properties privilege controls methods that modify the dead properties
of the resource, such as PROPPATCH.
Whether this privilege may be used to control access to any live
properties is determined by the implementation. Any implementation-defined privilege that also controls
access to methods modifying dead properties must be aggregated under
dav:write-properties—e.g. if an ACL grants access to dav:write-properties, the
client can safely expect that no other privilege needs to be granted to have
access to PROPPATCH.
<!ELEMENT write-properties
EMPTY>
The
DAV:write-content privilege controls methods that modify the content
or (in the case of a collection) membership of the resource, such as PUT and
DELETE. Any
implementation-defined privilege that also controls
access to content or alteration of collection membership must be aggregated
under dav:write-content—e.g. if an ACL grants access to dav:write-content, the
client can safely expect that no other privilege needs to be granted to have
access to PUT or DELETE.
<!ELEMENT write-content
EMPTY>
The dav:unlock privilege controls the use of the UNLOCK method to unlock a resource. (Note that while the set of users who may lock a resource is most commonly the same set of users who may modify a resource, servers may allow various kinds of administrators to unlock resources locked by others.) Any privilege controlling access to UNLOCK must be aggregated under dav:unlock.
<!ELEMENT unlock EMPTY>
The DAV:read-acl privilege controls
the use of PROPFIND to retrieve the DAV:acl property of the resource.
<!ELEMENT read-acl EMPTY>
The
DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set privilege controls the use of PROPFIND to
retrieve the DAV:current-user-privilege-set property of the resource.
Clients are intended to use this
property to visually indicate in their UI items that are dependent on the
permissions of a resource, for example, by graying out resources that are not
writeable.
This privilege is separate from
DAV:read-acl because there is a need to allow most users access to the
privileges permitted the current user (due to its use in creating the UI),
while the full ACL contains information that may not be appropriate for the
current authenticated user. As a result, the set of users who can view the full
ACL is expected to be much smaller than those who can read the current user
privilege set, and hence distinct privileges are needed for each.
<!ELEMENT
read-current-user-privilege-set EMPTY>
The DAV:write-acl privilege
controls use of the ACL method to modify the DAV:acl property of the resource.
<!ELEMENT write-acl EMPTY>
DAV:all is an aggregate privilege
that contains the entire set of privileges that can be applied to the resource.
<!ELEMENT all EMPTY>
Server implementations are free to
aggregate the predefined privileges (defined above in Sections 3.1-3.9) subject to the following limitations:
DAV:read-acl MUST NOT contain
DAV:read, DAV:write, DAV:write-acl, DAV:write-properties, DAV:write-content, or
DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set.
DAV:write-acl MUST NOT contain
DAV:write, DAV:read, DAV:read-acl, or DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set.
DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set
MUST NOT contain DAV:write, DAV:read, DAV:read-acl, or DAV:write-acl.
DAV:write MUST NOT contain
DAV:read, DAV:read-acl, or DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set.
DAV:read MUST NOT contain
DAV:write, DAV:write-acl, DAV:write-properties, or
DAV:write-content.
DAV:write
MUST contain DAV:write-properties and DAV:write-content.
Principals are manifested to
clients as a WebDAV resource, identified by a URL. A principal MUST have a DAV:displayname property (defined in
Section 13.2 of [RFC2518]), and a DAV:resourcetype property (defined in Section
13.9 of [RFC2518]). Additionally, a
principal MUST report the DAV:principal empty XML element in the value of the
DAV:resourcetype property in addition to all other reported elements. For
example, a group would report DAV:collection and DAV:principal elements. The
element type declaration for DAV:principal is:
<!ELEMENT principal EMPTY>
This protocol defines the following
additional property for a principal. Since it is expensive, for many servers,
to retrieve access control information, the name and value of this property
SHOULD NOT be returned by a PROPFIND allprop request (as defined in Section
12.14.1 of [RFC2518]).
This protected property, if non-empty, contains the URIs of network resources with additional descriptive information about the principal. This property identifies additional network resources (i.e., it contains one or more URIs) that may be consulted by a client to gain additional knowledge concerning a principal. One expected use for this property is the storage of an ldap [RFC2255] scheme URL. A user-agent encountering an ldap URL could use LDAP [RFC2589] to retrieve additional machine-readable directory information about the principal, and display that information in its user interface. Support for this property is REQUIRED, and the value is empty if no alternate URI exists for the principal.
<!ELEMENT alternate-URI-set (href*)>
A principal may have many URLs, but there must be one primary URL that clients can use to uniquely identify a principal—the principal-URL. This protected property contains the URL that MUST be used to identify this principal in an ACL request.
<!ELEMENT principal-URL (href)>
This protected property identifies the groups in which the principal is directly a member. Note that a server may allow a group to be a member of another group, in which case the DAV:group-membership of those other groups would need to be queried in order to determine the groups in which the principal is indirectly a member.
<!ELEMENT group-membership (href*)>
This specification defines a number
of new properties for WebDAV resources.
Access control properties may be retrieved just like other WebDAV
properties, using the PROPFIND method.
Since it is expensive, for many servers, to retrieve access control
information, a PROPFIND allprop request (as defined in Section 12.14.1 of
[RFC2518]) SHOULD NOT return the names and values of the properties defined in
this section.
HTTP resources that support the
WebDAV Access Control Protocol MUST contain the following properties. Null
resources (described in Section 3 of [RFC2518]) MUST NOT contain the following
properties:
This protected
property identifies a particular principal as being the "owner" of
the resource. Since the owner of a resource often has special access control
capabilities (e.g., the owner frequently has permanent DAV:write-acl
privilege), clients might display the resource owner in their user interface.
<!ELEMENT owner (href)>
This example shows a client request
for the value of the DAV:owner property from a collection resource with URL
http://www.webdav.org/papers/. The principal making the request is
authenticated using Digest authentication. The value of DAV:owner is the URL http://www.webdav.org/_acl/users/gstein,
wrapped in the DAV:href XML element.
>>
Request <<
PROPFIND /papers/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.webdav.org
Content-type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
Depth: 0
Authorization: Digest
username="jim",
realm="jim@webdav.org", nonce="...",
uri="/papers/", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:propfind
xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:prop>
<D:owner/>
</D:prop>
</D:propfind>
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/papers/</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:owner>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/_acl/users/gstein</D:href>
</D:owner>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200
OK</D:status>
</D:propstat>
</D:response>
</D:multistatus>
The following example shows a
client request to modify the value of the DAV:owner property on the resource
with URL <http://www.webdav.org/papers>. Since DAV:owner is a protected
property, the server responds with a 207 (Multi-Status) response that contains
a 403 (Forbidden) status code for the act of setting DAV:owner. Section 8.2.1
of [RFC2518] describes PROPPATCH status code information, and Section 11 of
[RFC2518] describes the Multi-Status response.
>>
Request <<
PROPPATCH /papers/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.webdav.org
Content-type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
Depth: 0
Authorization: Digest
username="jim",
realm="jim@webdav.org", nonce="...",
uri="/papers/", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:propertyupdate xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:set>
<D:prop>
<D:owner>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/_acl/users/jim</D:href>
</D:owner>
</D:prop>
</D:set>
</D:propertyupdate>
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/papers/</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop><D:owner/></D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 403
Forbidden</D:status>
<D:responsedescription>
Failure to set protected property (DAV:owner)
</D:responsedescription>
</D:propstat>
</D:response>
</D:multistatus>
This is a
protected property that identifies the privileges defined for the
resource.
<!ELEMENT supported-privilege-set (supported-privilege*)>
Each privilege appears as an XML element, where aggregate privileges list as sub-elements all of the privileges that they aggregate.
<!ELEMENT supported-privilege
(privilege, abstract?, description, supported-privilege*)>
<!ELEMENT privilege ANY>
An abstract privilege MUST NOT be used in an ACE for that resource. Servers MUST fail an attempt to set an abstract privilege.
<!ELEMENT abstract EMPTY>
A description is a human-readable description of what this privilege controls access to. Servers MUST indicate the human language of the description using the xml:lang attribute and SHOULD consider the HTTP Accept-Language request header when selecting one of multiple available languages.
<!ELEMENT description #PCDATA>
It is envisioned that a WebDAV
ACL-aware administrative client would list the supported privileges in a dialog
box, and allow the user to choose non-abstract privileges to apply in an
ACE. The privileges tree is useful
programmatically to map well-known privileges (defined by WebDAV or other
standards groups) into privileges that are supported by any particular server implementation. The privilege tree also serves to hide
complexity in implementations allowing large number of privileges to be defined
by displaying aggregates to the user.
This example shows a client request
for the DAV:supported-privilege-set property on the resource
http://www.webdav.org/papers/. The value of the DAV:supported-privilege-set
property is a tree of supported privileges (using "[XML Namespace ,
localname]" to identify each privilege):
[DAV:, all] (aggregate, abstract)
|
+-- [DAV:, read] (aggregate)
|
+-- [DAV:, read-acl] (abstract)
+-- [DAV:, read-current-user-privilege-set] (abstract)
|
+-- [DAV:, write] (aggregate)
|
+-- [DAV:, write-acl] (abstract)
+-- [DAV:, write-properties]
+-- [DAV:, write-content]
|
+-- [DAV:, unlock]
This privilege tree is not normative
(except that it reflects the normative aggregation rules given in Section 3.10), and many possible privilege trees are possible.
>>
Request <<
PROPFIND /papers/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.webdav.org
Content-type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
Depth: 0
Authorization: Digest
username="gclemm",
realm="gclemm@webdav.org", nonce="...",
uri="/papers/", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:propfind
xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:prop>
<D:supported-privilege-set/>
</D:prop>
</D:propfind>
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/papers/</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:supported-privilege-set>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:all/> </D:privilege>
<D:abstract/>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Any operation</D:description>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:read/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Read any object</D:description>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:read-acl/> </D:privilege>
<D:abstract/>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Read ACL</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege>
<D:read-current-user-privilege-set/>
</D:privilege>
<D:abstract/>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Read current user privilege set property</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
</D:supported-privilege>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:write/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Write any object</D:description>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:write-acl/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Write ACL</D:description>
<D:abstract/>
</D:supported-privilege>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:write-properties/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Write properties</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:write-content/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Write resource content</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
</D:supported-privilege>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:unlock/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Unlock resource</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
</D:supported-privilege>
</D:supported-privilege-set>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:propstat>
</D:response>
</D:multistatus>
DAV:current-user-privilege-set
is a protected property containing the exact set of privileges (as computed by
the server) granted to the currently authenticated HTTP user. Aggregate
privileges and their contained privileges are listed. A user-agent can use the
value of this property to adjust its user interface to make actions
inaccessible (e.g., by graying out a menu item or button) for which the current
principal does not have permission. This is particularly useful for an access
control user interface, which can be constructed without knowing the ACE
combining semantics of the server. This property is also useful for determining
what operations the current principal can perform, without having to actually
execute an operation.
<!ELEMENT current-user-privilege-set (privilege*)>
<!ELEMENT privilege ANY>
If the current
user is granted a specific privilege, that privilege must belong to the set of
privileges that may be set on this resource. Therefore, each element in the
DAV:current-user-privilege-set property MUST identify a non-abstract privilege
from the DAV:supported-privilege-set property.
Continuing the example from Section 5.2.1, this example shows a client requesting the DAV:current-user-privilege-set property from the resource with URL http://www.webdav.org/papers/. The username of the principal making the request is "khare", and Digest authentication is used in the request. The principal with username "khare" has been granted the DAV:read privilege. Since the DAV:read privilege contains the DAV:read-acl and DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set privileges (see Section 5.2.1), the principal with username "khare" can read the ACL property, and the DAV:current-user-privilege-set property. However, the DAV:all, DAV:read-acl, DAV:write-acl and DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set privileges are not listed in the value of DAV:current-user-privilege-set, since (for this example) they are abstract privileges. DAV:write is not listed since the principal with username "khare" is not listed in an ACE granting that principal write permission.
>>
Request <<
PROPFIND /papers/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.webdav.org
Content-type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
Depth: 0
Authorization: Digest
username="khare",
realm="khare@webdav.org", nonce="...",
uri="/papers/", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:propfind
xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:prop>
<D:current-user-privilege-set/>
</D:prop>
</D:propfind>
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/papers/</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:current-user-privilege-set>
<D:privilege> <D:read/> </D:privilege>
</D:current-user-privilege-set>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:propstat>
</D:response>
</D:multistatus>
This is a
protected property that specifies the list of access control entries (ACEs),
which define what principals are to get what privileges for this resource.
<!ELEMENT acl (ace | inherited-acl)* >
Each DAV:ace
element specifies the set of privileges to be either granted or denied to a
single principal. If the DAV:acl
property is empty, no principal is granted any privilege.
<!ELEMENT ace (invert | principal, (grant|deny), protected?, inherited?)>
The
DAV:principal element identifies the principal to which this ACE applies.
<!ELEMENT principal ((href)
| all | authenticated | unauthenticated
| property | self)>
The current user matches DAV:href only if that user is authenticated as being (or being a member of) the principal identified by the URL contained by that DAV:href.
The current user always matches
DAV:all.
<!ELEMENT all EMPTY>
The current user matches
DAV:authenticated only if authenticated.
<!ELEMENT authenticated EMPTY>
The current user matches
DAV:unauthenticated only if not authenticated.
<!ELEMENT unauthenticated EMPTY>
DAV:all is the union of
DAV:authenticated, and DAV:unauthenticated. For a given request, the user
matches either DAV:authenticated, or DAV:unauthenticated, but not both (that
is, DAV:authenticated and DAV:unauthenticated are disjoint sets).
The current user matches a
DAV:property principal in a DAV:acl property of a resource only if the value of
the identified property of that resource contains at most one DAV:href XML element,
the URI value of DAV:href identifies a principal, and the current user is
authenticated as being (or being a member of) that principal. For example, if the DAV:property element
contained <DAV:owner/>, the current user would match the DAV:property
principal only if the current user is authenticated as matching the principal
identified by the DAV:owner property of the resource.
<!ELEMENT property ANY>
Alternately, some servers may
support ACEs applying to those users NOT matching the current principal, e.g.
all users not in a particular group.
This can be done by wrapping the dav:principal element with dav:invert.
<!ELEMENT invert principal>
The current user matches DAV:self
in a DAV:acl property of the resource only if that resource is a principal and
that principal matches the current user or, if the principal is a group, a
member of that group matches the current user.
<!ELEMENT self EMPTY>
Each DAV:grant
or DAV:deny element specifies the set of privileges to be either granted or
denied to the specified principal. A
DAV:grant or DAV:deny element of the DAV:acl of a resource MUST only contain
non-abstract elements specified in the DAV:supported-privilege-set of that
resource.
<!ELEMENT grant (privilege+)>
<!ELEMENT deny (privilege+)>
<!ELEMENT privilege ANY>
A server
indicates an ACE is protected by including the DAV:protected element in the
ACE. If the ACL of a resource contains an ACE with a DAV:protected element, an
attempt to remove that ACE from the ACL MUST fail.
<!ELEMENT protected EMPTY>
The presence
of a DAV:inherited element indicates that this ACE is inherited from another
resource that is identified by the URL contained in a DAV:href element. An inherited ACE cannot be modified directly,
but instead the ACL on the resource from which it is inherited must be
modified.
Note that ACE inheritance is not
the same as ACL initialization. ACL
initialization defines the ACL that a newly created resource will use (if not
specified). ACE inheritance refers to
an ACE that is logically shared - where an update to the resource containing an
ACE will affect the ACE of each resource that inherits that ACE. The method by which ACLs are initialized or
by which ACEs are inherited is not defined by this document.
<!ELEMENT inherited (href)>
Continuing the example from Sections 5.2.1 and 5.3.1, this example shows a client requesting the DAV:acl property from the resource with URL http://www.webdav.org/papers/. There are two ACEs defined in this ACL:
ACE #1: The group identified by URL http://www.webdav.org/_acl/groups/maintainers/ (the group of site maintainers) is granted DAV:write privilege. Since (for this example) DAV:write contains the DAV:write-acl privilege (see Section 5.2.1), this means the "maintainers" group can also modify the access control list.
ACE #2: All principals (DAV:all) are granted the DAV:read privilege. Since (for this example) DAV:read contains DAV:read-acl and DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set, this means all users (including all members of the "maintainers" group) can read the DAV:acl property and the DAV:current-user-privilege-set property.
>> Request <<
PROPFIND /papers/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.webdav.org
Content-type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
Depth: 0
Authorization: Digest
username="masinter",
realm="masinter@webdav.org", nonce="...",
uri="/papers/", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:propfind
xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:prop>
<D:acl/>
</D:prop>
</D:propfind>
>>
Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/papers/</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:acl>
<D:ace>
<D:principal>
<D:href>
http://www.webdav.org/_acl/groups/maintainers/
</D:href>
</D:principal>
<D:grant>
<D:privilege> <D:write/> </D:privilege>
</D:grant>
</D:ace>
<D:ace>
<D:principal>
<D:all/>
</D:principal>
<D:grant>
<D:privilege> <D:read/> </D:privilege>
</D:grant>
</D:ace>
</D:acl>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1
200 OK</D:status>
</D:propstat>
</D:response>
</D:multistatus>
This is a protected property that
lists a set of other resources whose ACLs also control the access to this
resource. To have a privilege on a
resource, not only must the ACEs defined in the ACL on that resource grant the
privilege, but so must each ACL in a dav:inherited-acl tag. Effectively, the privileges granted by the
current ACL are AND’ed with the privileges granted by each inherited ACL. The order in which the inherited-acl tag
appears in an ACL is relevant, regardless of the ACL semantics (see below).
<!ELEMENT inherited-acl (href)>
This is a protected property that
defines the ACL semantics. These
semantics define how multiple ACEs that match the current user are combined,
what are the constraints on how ACEs can be ordered, and which principals must
have an ACE. A client user interface could use the value of this property to
provide feedback to a human operator concerning the impact of proposed changes
to an ACL. Alternately, a client can use this property to help it determine,
before submitting an ACL method invocation, what ACL changes it needs to make
to accomplish a specific goal (or whether that goal is even achievable on this
server).
Since it is not practical to
require all implementations to use the same ACL semantics, the
DAV:acl-semantics property is used to identify the ACL semantics for a
particular resource. The
DAV:acl-semantics element is defined in Section 6.
In this example, the client requests the value of the DAV:acl-semantics property. Digest authentication provides credentials for the principal operating the client. In this example, the ACE combination semantics are DAV:first-match, described in Section 6.1.1, the ACE ordering semantics are not specified (some value other than DAV:deny-before-grant, described in Section 6.2.1), the DAV:allowed-ace element states that only one ACE is permitted for each principal, and an ACE describing the privileges granted the DAV:all principal must exist in every ACL.
>>
Request <<
PROPFIND /papers/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.webdav.org
Content-type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
Depth: 0
Authorization: Digest
username="srcarter",
realm="srcarter@webdav.org", nonce="...",
uri="/papers/", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:propfind
xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:prop>
<D:acl-semantics/>
</D:prop>
</D:propfind>
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/papers/</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:acl-semantics>
<D:ace-combination>
<D:first-match/>
</D:ace-combination>
<D:ace-ordering/>
<D:allowed-ace>
<D:principal-only-one-ace/>
</D:allowed-ace>
<D:required-principal>
<D:all/>
</D:required-principal>
</D:acl-semantics>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:propstat>
<D:response>
</D:multistatus>
This protected property of a resource contains a set of URLs that identify the root collections that contain the principals that are available on the server that implements this resource. An access control protocol user agent could use the contents of DAV:principal-collection-set to retrieve the DAV:displayname property (specified in Section 13.2 of [RFC2518]) of all principals on that server, thereby yielding human-readable names for each principal that could be displayed in a user interface.
<!ELEMENT principal-collection-set (href*)>
Since different servers can control different parts of the URL namespace, different resources on the same host MAY have different DAV:principal-collection-set values. The collections specified in the DAV:principal-collection-set MAY be located on different hosts from the resource. The URLs in DAV:principal-collection-set SHOULD be http or https scheme URLs. For security and scalability reasons, a server MAY report only a subset of the entire set of known principal collections, and therefore clients should not assume they have retrieved an exhaustive listing. Additionally, a server MAY elect to report none of the principal collections it knows about, in which case the property value would be empty.
The value of DAV:principal-collection-set gives the scope of the DAV:principal-property-search REPORT (defined in Section 9.4). Clients use the DAV:principal-property-search REPORT to populate their user interface with a list of principals. Therefore, servers that limit a client's ability to obtain principal information will interfere with the client's ability to manipulate access control lists, due to the difficulty of getting the URL of a principal for use in an ACE.
In this example, the client requests the value of the DAV:principal-collection-set property on the collection resource identified by URL http://www.webdav.org/papers/. The property contains the two URLs, http://www.webdav.org/_acl/users/ and http://www.webdav.org/_acl/groups/, both wrapped in <DAV:href> XML elements. Digest authentication provides credentials for the principal operating the client.
The client might reasonably follow this request with two separate PROPFIND requests to retrieve the DAV:displayname property of the members of the two collections (/_acl/users/ and /_acl_groups/). This information could be used when displaying a user interface for creating access control entries.
>>
Request <<
PROPFIND /papers/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.webdav.org
Content-type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
Depth: 0
Authorization: Digest
username="yarong",
realm="yarong@webdav.org", nonce="...",
uri="/papers/", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:propfind
xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:prop>
<D:principal-collection-set/>
</D:prop>
</D:propfind>
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/papers/</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:principal-collection-set>
<D:href>
http://www.webdav.org/_acl/users/
</D:href>
<D:href>
http://www.webdav.org/_acl/groups/
</D:href>
</D:principal-collection-set>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:propstat>
</D:response>
</D:multistatus>
The following example shows how
access control information can be retrieved by using the PROPFIND method to
fetch the values of the DAV:owner, DAV:supported-privilege-set,
DAV:current-user-privilege-set, and DAV:acl properties.
>> Request <<
PROPFIND
/top/container/ HTTP/1.1
Host:
www.foo.org
Content-type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
Depth: 0
Authorization: Digest
username="ejw",
realm="users@foo.org", nonce="...",
uri="/top/container/", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:propfind
xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:prop>
<D:owner/>
<D:supported-privilege-set/>
<D:current-user-privilege-set/>
<D:acl/>
</D:prop>
</D:propfind>
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus
xmlns:D="DAV:"
xmlns:A="http://www.webdav.org/acl/"> <D:response>
<D:href>http://www.foo.org/top/container/</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:owner>
<D:href>http://www.foo.org/users/gclemm</D:href>
</D:owner>
<D:supported-privilege-set>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:all/> </D:privilege>
<D:abstract/>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Any operation</D:description>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:read/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Read any object</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:write/> </D:privilege>
<D:abstract/>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Write any object</D:description>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <A:create/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Create an object</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <A:update/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Update an object</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <A:delete/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Delete an object</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
</D:supported-privilege>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:read-acl/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Read the ACL</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
<D:supported-privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:write-acl/> </D:privilege>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Write the ACL</D:description>
</D:supported-privilege>
</D:supported-privilege>
</D:supported-privilege-set>
<D:current-user-privilege-set>
<D:privilege> <D:read/> </D:privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:read-acl/> </D:privilege>
</D:current-user-privilege-set>
<D:acl>
<D:ace>
<D:principal>
<D:href>http://www.foo.org/users/esedlar</D:href>
</D:principal>
<D:grant>
<D:privilege> <D:read/> </D:privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:write/> </D:privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:read-acl/> </D:privilege>
</D:grant>
</D:ace>
<D:ace>
<D:principal>
<D:href>http://www.foo.org/groups/marketing/</D:href>
</D:principal>
<D:deny>
<D:privilege> <D:read/> </D:privilege> </D:deny>
</D:ace>
<D:ace>
<D:principal>
<D:property> <D:owner/> </D:property>
</D:principal>
<D:grant>
<D:privilege> <D:read-acl/> </D:privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:write-acl/> </D:privilege>
</D:grant>
</D:ace>
<D:ace>
<D:principal> <D:all/> </D:principal>
<D:grant>
<D:privilege> <D:read/> </D:privilege></D:grant>
<D:inherited>
<D:href>http://www.foo.org/top/</D:href>
</D:inherited>
</D:ace> </D:acl>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:propstat> </D:response> </D:multistatus>
The value of the DAV:owner property is a single
DAV:href XML element containing the URL of the principal that owns this
resource.
The value of the DAV:supported-privilege-set
property is a tree of supported privileges (using "[XML Namespace ,
localname]" to identify each privilege):
[DAV:, all] (aggregate, abstract)
|
+-- [DAV:, read]
+-- [DAV:, write] (aggregate, abstract)
|
+-- [http://www.webdav.org/acl/, create]
+-- [http://www.webdav.org/acl/, update]
+-- [http://www.webdav.org/acl/, delete]
+-- [DAV:, read-acl]
+-- [DAV:, write-acl]
The DAV:current-user-privilege-set property
contains two privileges, DAV:read, and DAV:read-acl. This indicates that the
current authenticated user only has the ability to read the resource, and read
the DAV:acl property on the resource.
The DAV:acl property contains a set of four
ACEs:
ACE #1: The principal identified by the URL
http://www.foo.org/users/esedlar is granted the DAV:read, DAV:write, and
DAV:read-acl privileges.
ACE #2: The principals identified by the URL
http://www.foo.org/groups/marketing/ are denied the DAV:read privilege. In this example, the principal URL
identifies a group.
ACE #3: In this ACE, the principal is a
property principal, specifically the DAV:owner property. When evaluating this
ACE, the value of the DAV:owner property is retrieved, and is examined to see
if it contains a DAV:href XML element. If so, the URL within the DAV:href
element is read, and identifies a principal. In this ACE, the owner is granted
DAV:read-acl, and DAV:write-acl privileges.
ACE #4: This ACE grants the DAV:all principal
(all users) the DAV:read privilege. This ACE is inherited from the resource
http://www.foo.org/top/, the parent collection of this resource.
The ACL semantics define how
multiple ACEs that match the current user are combined, what are the
constraints on how ACEs can be ordered, and which principals must have an ACE.
<!ELEMENT acl-semantics (ace-combination?, ace-ordering?, allowed-ace?, required-principal?)>
The DAV:ace-combination element
defines how privileges from multiple ACEs that match the current user will be
combined to determine the access privileges for that user. Multiple ACEs may match the same user
because the same principal can appear in multiple ACEs, because multiple
principals can identify the same user, and because one principal can be a
member of another principal.
<!ELEMENT ace-combination
(first-match | all-grant-before-any-deny | specific-deny-overrides-grant)>
The ACEs are evaluated in the order in which they appear in the ACL. If the first ACE that matches the current user does not grant all the privileges needed for the request, the request MUST fail.
<!ELEMENT first-match EMPTY>
The ACEs are evaluated in the order in which they appear in the ACL. If an evaluated ACE denies a privilege needed for the request, the request MUST fail. If all ACEs have been evaluated without the user being granted all privileges needed for the request, the request MUST fail.
<!ELEMENT all-grant-before-any-deny EMPTY>
All ACEs in the ACL are evaluated. An "individual ACE" is one whose principal matches the current user. A "group ACE" is one whose principal is a group that has a member that matches the current user. A privilege is granted if it is granted by an individual ACE and not denied by an individual ACE, or if it is granted by a group ACE and not denied by an individual or group ACE. A request MUST fail if any of its needed privileges are not granted.
<!ELEMENT specific-deny-overrides-grant EMPTY>
The DAV:ace-ordering element
defines a constraint on how the ACEs can be ordered in the ACL.
<!ELEMENT ace-ordering
(deny-before-grant)? >
This element indicates that all deny ACEs must precede all grant ACEs.
<!ELEMENT deny-before-grant EMPTY>
The DAV:allowed-ace XML element specifies constraints on what kinds of ACEs are allowed in an ACL.
<!ELEMENT
allowed-ace (principal-only-one-ace | grant-only |
no-invert |
no-acl-inherit)*>
This element indicates that a principal can appear in only one ACE per resource.
<!ELEMENT principal-only-one-ace EMPTY>
This element indicates that ACEs with deny clauses are not allowed.
<!ELEMENT grant-only EMPTY>
This element indicates that ACEs with the <invert> element are not allowed.
<!ELEMENT no-invert EMPTY>
This element indicates that ACLs with the <inherited-acl> element are not allowed.
<!ELEMENT no-acl-inherit EMPTY>
The required principal elements
identify which principals must have an ACE defined in the ACL.
<!ELEMENT required-principal
(all? | authenticated? | unauthenticated? | self? | href* | property*)>
For example, the following element
requires that the ACL contain a DAV:owner property ACE:
<D:required-principal xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:property> <D:owner/> </D:property>
</D:required-principal>
This section defines the impact of access control functionality on existing methods.
If the server supports access control, it MUST return "access-control" as a field in the DAV response header from an OPTIONS request on any resource implemented by that server.
>> Request <<
OPTIONS /foo.html HTTP/1.1
Host: www.webdav.org
Content-Length: 0
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
DAV: 1, 2, access-control
Allow: OPTIONS, GET, PUT, PROPFIND, PROPPATCH, ACL
In this example, the OPTIONS response indicates that the server supports access control and that /foo.html can have its access control list modified by the ACL method.
When a resource is moved from one location to another due to a MOVE request, the non-inherited and non-protected ACEs in the DAV:acl property of the resource MUST NOT be modified, or the MOVE request fails. Handling of inherited and protected ACEs is intentionally undefined to give server implementations flexibility in how they implement ACE inheritance and protection.
The DAV:acl property on the resource at the destination of a COPY MUST be the same as if the resource was created by an individual resource creation request (e.g. MKCOL, PUT). Clients wishing to preserve the DAV:acl property across a copy need to read the DAV:acl property prior to the COPY, then perform an ACL operation on the new resource at the destination to restore, insofar as this is possible, the original access control list.
The precise combination of privileges and resources necessary to permit the DELETE method is intentionally left to the discretion of each server implementation. It is envisioned that on some servers, DELETE will require write permission on the collection containing the resource to be deleted. On other servers, it might also require write permission on the resource being deleted.
A lock on a resource ensures that only the lock owner can modify ACEs that are not inherited and not protected (these are the only ACEs that a client can modify with an ACL request). A lock does not protect inherited or protected ACEs, since a client cannot modify them with an ACL request on that resource.
The ACL method modifies the access
control list (which can be read via the DAV:acl property) of a resource. Specifically, the ACL method only permits
modification to ACEs that are not inherited, and are not protected. An ACL
method invocation modifies all non-inherited and non-protected ACEs in a
resource's access control list to exactly match the ACEs contained within in
the DAV:acl XML element (specified in Section 5.4) of the request body. An ACL request body MUST
contain only one DAV:acl XML element. Unless the non-inherited and
non-protected ACEs of the DAV:acl property of the resource can be updated to be
exactly the value specified in the ACL request, the ACL request MUST fail.
It is possible that the ACEs
visible to the current user in the DAV:acl property may only be a portion of
the complete set of ACEs on that resource. If this is the case, an ACL request
only modifies the set of ACEs visible to the current user, and does not affect
any non-visible ACE.
In order to avoid overwriting
DAV:acl changes by another client, a client SHOULD acquire a WebDAV lock on the
resource before retrieving the DAV:acl property of a resource that it intends
on updating.
Implementation Note: Two common
operations are to add or remove an ACE from an existing access control list. To
accomplish this, a client uses the PROPFIND method to retrieve the value of the
DAV:acl property, then parses the returned access control list to remove all
inherited and protected ACEs (these ACEs are tagged with the DAV:inherited and
DAV:protected XML elements). In the remaining set of non-inherited,
non-protected ACEs, the client can add or remove one or more ACEs before
submitting the final ACE set in the request body of the ACL method.
An implementation MAY enforce one
or more of the following constraints on an ACL request. If the constraint is violated, a 403
(Forbidden) or 409 (Conflict) response MUST be returned and the indicated XML
element MUST be returned as a child of a top level DAV:error element in an XML
response body.
(DAV:no-ace-conflict): The ACEs
submitted in the ACL request MUST NOT conflict with each other. What is considered a conflict depends on the
ACL semantics of that resource.
(DAV:no-protected-ace-conflict):
The ACEs submitted in the ACL request MUST NOT conflict with the protected ACEs
on the resource. For example, if the resource has a protected ACE granting
DAV:write to a given principal, then it would not be consistent if the ACL
request submitted an ACE denying DAV:write to the same principal.
(DAV:no-inherited-ace-conflict):
The ACEs submitted in the ACL request MUST NOT conflict with the inherited ACEs
on the resource. For example, if the resource inherits an ACE from its parent
collection granting DAV:write to a given principal, then it would not be
consistent if the ACL request submitted an ACE denying DAV:write to the same
principal. Note that reporting of this error will be implementation-dependent.
Implementations have the choice to either report this error, or to allow the
ACE to be set, and then let normal ACE evaluation rules determine whether the
new ACE has any impact on the privileges available to a specific principal.
(DAV:limited-number-of-aces): The
number of ACEs submitted in the ACL request MUST NOT exceed the number of ACEs
allowed on that resource. However,
ACL-compliant servers MUST support at least one ACE granting privileges to a single
principal, and one ACE granting privileges to a group.
(DAV:deny-before-grant): All
non-inherited deny ACEs MUST precede all non-inherited grant ACEs.
(DAV:principal-only-one-ace): The
ACL request MUST NOT result in more than one ACE for a given principal. This precondition applies only when the ACL
semantics of the resource includes the DAV:principal-only-one-ace constraint
(defined in Section 6.3.1).
(DAV:grant-only): The ACEs
submitted in the ACL request MUST NOT include a deny ACE. This precondition applies only when the ACL
semantics of the resource includes the DAV:grant-only constraint (defined in
Section 6.3.2).
(DAV:no-invert): The ACL request MUST NOT include a
<dav:invert> element. This
precondition applies only when the ACL semantics of the resource includes the
DAV:no-invert constraint (defined in Section 6.3.4).
(DAV:no-acl-inherit): The ACL request MUST NOT include a
<dav:inherited-acl> element.
This precondition applies only when the ACL semantics of the resource includes
the DAV:no-acl-inherit constraint (defined in Section 6.3.4).
(DAV:no-abstract): The ACL request
MUST NOT attempt to grant or deny an abstract privilege (see Section 5.2).
(DAV:not-supported-privilege): The
ACEs submitted in the ACL request MUST be supported by the resource.
(DAV:missing-required-principal):
The result of the ACL request MUST have at least one ACE for each principal
identified in a DAV:required-principal XML element in the ACL semantics of that
resource (see Section 6.3.2).
(DAV:recognized-principal): Every
principal URL in the ACL request MUST identify a principal resource.
(DAV:allowed-principal): The
principals specified in the ACEs submitted in the ACL request MUST be allowed
as principals for the resource. For example, a server where only authenticated
principals can access resources would not allow the DAV:all or
DAV:unauthenticated principals to be used in an ACE, since these would allow
unauthenticated access to resources.
In the following example, user
"fielding", authenticated by information in the Authorization header,
grants the principal identified by the URL http://www.foo.org/users/esedlar (i.e., the user "esedlar") read
and write privileges, grants the owner of the resource read-acl and write-acl
privileges, and grants everyone read privileges.
>>
Request <<
ACL /top/container/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.foo.org
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxxx
Authorization: Digest username="fielding",
realm="users@foo.org", nonce="...",
uri="/top/container/", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:acl
xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:ace>
<D:principal>
<D:href>http://www.foo.org/users/esedlar</D:href>
</D:principal>
<D:grant>
<D:privilege> <D:read/> </D:privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:write/> </D:privilege>
</D:grant>
</D:ace>
<D:ace>
<D:principal>
<D:property> <D:owner/> </D:property>
</D:principal>
<D:grant>
<D:privilege> <D:read-acl/> </D:privilege>
<D:privilege> <D:write-acl/> </D:privilege>
</D:grant>
</D:ace>
<D:ace>
<D:principal> <D:all/> </D:principal>
<D:grant>
<D:privilege> <D:read/> </D:privilege>
</D:grant>
</D:ace> </D:acl>
>>
Response <<
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
In the following request, user
"fielding", authenticated by information in the Authorization header,
attempts to deny the principal identified by the URL http://www.foo.org/users/esedlar (i.e., the user "esedlar") write
privileges. Prior to the request, the DAV:acl property on the resource
contained a protected ACE (see Section 5.4.3) granting DAV:owner the DAV:read and DAV:write
privileges. The principal identified by URL http://www.foo.org/users/esedlar is
the owner of the resource. The ACL method invocation fails because the
submitted ACE conflicts with the protected ACE, thus violating the semantics of
ACE protection.
>>
Request <<
ACL /top/container/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.foo.org
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxxx
Authorization: Digest
username="fielding",
realm="users@foo.org", nonce="...",
uri="/top/container/", response="...", opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:acl
xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:ace>
<D:principal>
<D:href>http://www.foo.org/users/esedlar</D:href>
</D:principal>
<D:deny>
<D:privilege> <D:write/> </D:privilege>
</D:deny>
</D:ace>
</D:acl>
>>
Response <<
HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:error xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:no-protected-ace-conflict/>
</D:error>
In the following request, user "ejw", authenticated by information in the Authorization header, tries to change the access control list on the resource http://www.foo.org/top/index.html. This resource has two inherited ACEs.
Inherited ACE #1 grants the principal identified by URL http://www.foo.org/users/ejw (i.e., the user "ejw") http://www.foo.org/privs/write-all and DAV:read-acl privileges. On this server, http://www.foo.org/privs/write-all is an aggregate privilege containing DAV:write, and DAV:write-acl.
Inherited ACE #2 grants principal DAV:all the DAV:read privilege.
The request attempts to set a (non-inherited) ACE, denying the principal identified by the URL http://www.foo.org/users/ejw (i.e., the user "ejw") DAV:write permission. This conflicts with inherited ACE #1. Note that the decision to report an inherited ACE conflict is specific to this server implementation. Another server implementation could have allowed the new ACE to be set, and then used normal ACE evaluation rules to determine whether the new ACE has any impact on the privileges available to a principal.
>> Request <<
ACL /top/index.html HTTP/1.1
Host: www.foo.org
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxxx
Authorization: Digest username="ejw",
realm="users@foo.org", nonce="...",
uri="/top/index.html", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:acl xmlns:D="DAV:"
xmlns:F="http://www.foo.org/privs/">
<D:ace>
<D:principal>
<D:href>http://www.foo.org/users/ejw</D:href>
</D:principal>
<D:grant><D:write/></D:grant>
</D:ace>
</D:acl>
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 403
Forbidden
Content-Type:
text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length:
xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:error xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:no-inherited-ace-conflict xmlns:D="DAV:"/>
</D:error>
In this example, user "ygoland", authenticated by information in the Authorization header, tries to change the access control list on the resource http://www.foo.org/diamond/engagement-ring.gif. The ACL request includes a single, syntactically and semantically incorrect ACE, which attempts to grant the group identified by the URL http://www.foo.org/users/friends/ DAV:read privilege and deny the principal identified by URL http://www.foo.org/users/ygoland-so (i.e., the user "ygoland-so") DAV:read privilege. However, it is illegal to have multiple principal elements, as well as both a grant and deny element in the same ACE, so the request fails due to poor syntax.
>> Request <<
ACL /diamond/engagement-ring.gif
HTTP/1.1
Host: www.foo.org
Content-Type: text/xml;
charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxxx
Authorization: Digest
username="ygoland",
realm="users@foo.org", nonce="...",
uri="/diamond/engagement-ring.gif", response="...",
opaque="..."
<?xml version="1.0"
encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:acl
xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:ace>
<D:principal>
<D:href>http://www.foo.org/users/friends/</D:href>
</D:principal>
<D:grant><D:read/></D:grant>
<D:principal>
<D:href>http://www.foo.org/users/ygoland-so</D:href>
</D:principal>
<D:deny><D:read/></D:deny>
</D:ace>
</D:acl>
>>
Response <<
HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
Content-Length: 0
Note that if the request had been
divided into two ACEs, one to grant, and one to deny, the request would have
been syntactically well formed.
The REPORT method (defined in Section 3.6 of [RFC3253]) provides an extensible mechanism for obtaining information about a resource. Unlike the PROPFIND method, which returns the value of one or more named properties, the REPORT method can involve more complex processing. REPORT is valuable in cases where the server has access to all of the information needed to perform the complex request (such as a query), and where it would require multiple requests for the client to retrieve the information needed to perform the same request.
The DAV:acl-principal-prop-set
report returns, for all principals in the DAV:acl property that are identified
by http(s) URLs or by a DAV:property principal, the value of the properties
specified in the REPORT request body. In the case where a principal URL appears
multiple times, the DAV:acl-principal-prop-set report MUST return the
properties for that principal only once.
Marshalling
The
request body MUST be a DAV:acl-principal-prop-set
XML element.
<!ELEMENT acl-principal-prop-set ANY>
ANY value: a sequence of one or more elements, with at most one DAV:prop element.
prop: see RFC 2518, Section 12.11
The response body for a successful request MUST be a DAV:multistatus XML element (i.e., the response uses the same format as the response for PROPFIND).
multistatus: see RFC 2518, Section 12.9
The response body for a successful DAV:acl-principal-prop-set REPORT request MUST contain a DAV:response element for each principal identified by an http(s) URL listed in a DAV:principal XML element of an ACE within the DAV:acl property of the resource identified by the Request-URI.
Resource
http://www.webdav.org/index.html has an ACL with three ACEs:
ACE #1: All principals (DAV:all)
have DAV:read and DAV:read-current-user-privilege-set access.
ACE #2: The principal identified by
http://www.webdav.org/people/gstein (the user "gstein") is granted
DAV:write, DAV:write-acl, DAV:read-acl
privileges.
ACE #3: The group identified by
http://www.webdav.org/groups/authors/ (the "authors" group) is
granted DAV:write and DAV:read-acl privileges.
The following example shows a
DAV:acl-principal-prop-set report requesting the DAV:displayname property. It
returns the value of DAV:displayname for resources
http://www.webdav.org/people/gstein and http://www.webdav.org/groups/authors/ ,
but not for DAV:all, since this is not an http(s) URL.
>> Request <<
REPORT /index.html HTTP/1.1
Host: www.webdav.org
Content-Type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:acl-principal-prop-set xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:prop>
<D:displayname/>
</D:prop>
</D:acl-principal-prop-set>
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/people/gstein</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:displayname>Greg Stein</D:displayname>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:propstat>
</D:response>
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/groups/authors/</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:displayname>Site authors</D:displayname>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:propstat>
</D:response>
</D:multistatus>
The DAV:principal-match REPORT is used to identify all members of a collection that match the current user. In particular, if the collection contains principals, the report can be used to identify all members of the collection that match the current user. Alternatively, if the collection contains resources that have a property that identifies a principal (e.g. DAV:owner), then the report can be used to identify all members of the collection whose property identifies a principal that matches the current user. For example, this report can return all of the resources in a collection hierarchy that are owned by the current user.
Marshalling:
The request body MUST be a DAV:principal-match XML element.
<!ELEMENT principal-match ((principal-property | self), prop?)>
<!ELEMENT principal-property ANY>
ANY value: an element whose value identifies a property. The expectation is the value of the named property typically contains an href element that contains the URI of a principal
<!ELEMENT self EMPTY>
prop: see RFC 2518, Section 12.11
The response body for a successful request MUST be a DAV:multistatus XML element.
multistatus: see RFC 2518, Section 12.9
The response body for a successful DAV:principal-match REPORT request MUST contain a DAV:response element for each member of the collection that matches the current user. When the DAV:principal-property element is used, a match occurs if the current user is matched by the principal identified by the URI found in the DAV:href element of the property identified by the DAV:principal-property element. When the DAV:self element is used in a DAV:principal-match report issued against a group, it matches a member of the group if that child (a principal resource) identifies the same principal as the current user.
If DAV:prop is specified in the request body, the properties specified in the DAV:prop element MUST be reported in the DAV:response elements.
The following example identifies the members of the collection identified by the URL http://www.webdav.org/doc/ that are owned by the current user. The current user ("gclemm") is authenticated using Digest authentication.
>> Request <<
REPORT /doc/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.webdav.org
Authorization: Digest
username="gclemm",
realm="gclemm@webdav.org", nonce="...",
uri="/papers/", response="...",
opaque="..."
Content-Type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxxx
Depth: infinity
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:principal-match xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:principal-property>
<D:owner/>
</D:principal-property>
</D:principal-match>
>> Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/doc/foo.html</D:href>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:response>
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.webdav.org/doc/img/bar.gif</D:href>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:response>
</D:multistatus>
The DAV:principal-property-search REPORT performs a substring search on the character data value of specified properties. The server may perform caseless matching of substrings. Only properties defined on principal resources are searched. For implementation efficiency, servers do not typically support substring searching on all properties. A client can discover the set of searchable properties by using the DAV:principal-search-property-set REPORT, defined in Section 9.5.
Implementation Note: The value of a WebDAV property is a sequence of well-formed XML, and hence can include any character in the Unicode/ISO-10646 standard, that is, most known characters in human languages. Due to the idiosyncrasies of case mapping across human languages, implementation of caseless matching is non-trivial. Implementors are strongly encouraged to consult [CaseMap], especially Section 2.3 ("Caseless Matching"), for guidance when implementing their caseless matching algorithms.
Marshalling:
The scope of the DAV:principal-property-search REPORT is all principal resources that are members of a collection identified in DAV:principal-collection-set. If a group is in the scope of the DAV:principal-property-search REPORT, all members of that group are also in the scope.
Servers MUST support the DAV:principal-property-search REPORT on all principal collections identified in the value of a DAV:principal-collection-set property.
The request body MUST be a DAV:principal-property-search XML element containing a search specification and an optional list of properties. For every principal that matches the search specification, the response will contain the value of the properties on that principal.
<!ELEMENT principal-property-search ((property-search+), prop?) >
The DAV:property-search element contains a prop element enumerating the properties to be searched and a substring element, containing the search string, and an optional tag indicating whether or not case-insensitive string matching should be done (the default is implementation-dependent).
<!ELEMENT property-search (prop, substring, caseless?) >
prop: see RFC 2518, Section 12.11
<!ELEMENT substring #PCDATA >
<!ELEMENT caseless EMPTY>
Multiple property-search elements or multiple elements within a DAV:prop element will be interpreted with a logical AND. An empty DAV:substring element will match all properties specified in its parent DAV:property-search element.
The response body for a successful request MUST be a DAV:multistatus XML element.
multistatus: see RFC 2518, Section 12.9
The response body for a successful DAV:principal-property-search REPORT request MUST contain a DAV:response element for each principal whose property values satisfy the search specification given in DAV:principal-property-search.
If DAV:prop is specified in the request body, the properties specified in the DAV:prop element MUST be reported in the DAV:response elements.
Preconditions:
(DAV:non-searchable-property): All
properties specified in the DAV:principal-property-search REPORT must be
searchable.
There are several cases to consider when matching strings. The easiest case is when a property value is "simple" and has only character information item content (see [REC-XML-INFOSET]). For example, the search string "julian" would match the DAV:displayname property with value "Julian Reschke". Note that the on-the-wire marshalling of DAV:displayname in this case is:
<D:displayname xmlns:D="DAV:">Julian Reschke</D:displayname>
The name of the property is encoded into the XML element information item, and the character information item content of the property is "Julian Reschke".
The more complicated case occurred when properties have mixed content (that is, compound values consisting of multiple child element items, other types of information items, and character information item content). Consider the property http://www.webdav.org/props/aprop, marshalled as:
<W:aprop
xmlns:W="http://www.webdav.org/props/">
{cdata 0}<W:elem1>{cdata 1}</W:elem1>
<W:elem2>{cdata 2}</W:elem2>{cdata
3}
</W:aprop>
In this case, substring matching is performed on each individual contiguous sequence of character information items. In the example above, a search string would be compared to the four following strings:
{cdata
0}
{cdata 1}
{cdata 2}
{cdata 3}
That is, four individual substring matches would be performed, one each for {cdata 0}, {cdata 1}, {cdata 2}, and {cdata 3}.
In this example, the client requests the principal URLs of all users whose DAV:displayname property contains the substring "doE" and whose http://BigCorp.com/ns/title property (that is, their professional title) contains "Sales". In addition, the client requests five properties to be returned with the matching principals:
In
the DAV: namespace: displayname
In the http://www.BigCorp.com/ns/ namespace: department, phone, office, salary
The response shows that two principal resources meet the search specification, "John Doe" and "Zygdoebert Smith". The property "salary" in namespace "http://www.BigCorp.com/ns/" is not returned, since the principal making the request does not have sufficient access permissions to read this property.
>>
Request <<
REPORT /users/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.BigCorp.com
Content-Type: text/xml; charset=utf-8
Content-Length: xxxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:principal-property-search xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:property-search>
<D:prop>
<D:displayname/>
</D:prop>
<D:substring>doE</D:substring>
<D:caseless/>
</D:property-search>
<D:property-search>
<D:prop xmlns:B="http://www.BigCorp.com/ns/">
<B:title/>
</D:prop>
<D:substring>Sales</D: substring>
</D:property-search>
<D:prop xmlns:B="http://www.BigCorp.com/ns/">
<D:displayname/>
<B:department/>
<B:phone/>
<B:office/>
<B:salary/>
</D:prop>
</D:principal-property-search>
>>
Response <<
HTTP/1.1 207 Multi-Status
Content-Type: text/xml; charset=utf-8
Content-Length: xxxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:" xmlns:B="http://BigCorp.com/ns/">
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.BigCorp.com/users/jdoe</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:displayname>John Doe</D:displayname>
<B:department>Widget Sales</B:department>
<B:phone>234-4567</B:phone>
<B:office>209</B:office>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:propstat>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<B:salary/>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden</D:status>
</D:propstat>
</D:response>
<D:response>
<D:href>http://www.BigCorp.com/users/zsmith</D:href>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<D:displayname>Zygdoebert Smith</D:displayname>
<B:department>Gadget Sales</B:department>
<B:phone>234-7654</B:phone>
<B:office>114</B:office>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</D:status>
</D:propstat>
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<B:salary/>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden</D:status>
</D:propstat>
</D:response>
</D:multistatus>
In this example, the client requests a search on the non-searchable property "phone" in the namespace "http://www.BigCorp.com/ns/". The response is a 403 (Forbidden), with a response body containing a DAV:non-searchable-property XML element as the value of a DAV:error XML element.
>>
Request <<
REPORT /users/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.BigCorp.com
Content-Type: text/xml; charset=utf-8
Content-Length: xxxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:principal-property-search xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:property-search>
<D:prop xmlns:B="http://www.BigCorp.com/ns/">
<B:phone/>
</D:prop>
<D:caseless-substring>232</D:caseless-substring>
</D:property-search>
</D:principal-property-search>
>>
Response <<
HTTP/1.1 403 FORBIDDEN
Content-Type: text/xml; charset=utf-8
Content-Length: xxxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:error xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:non-searchable-property>
<D:prop xmlns:B="http://www.BigCorp.com/ns/">
<B:phone/>
</D:prop>
</D:non-searchable-property>
</D:error>
The DAV:principal-search-property-set REPORT identifies those properties that may be searched using the DAV:principal-property-search REPORT (defined in Section 9.4).
Servers MUST support the DAV:principal-search-property-set REPORT on all principal collections identified in the value of a DAV:principal-collection-set property.
An access control protocol user agent could use the results of the DAV:principal-search-property-set REPORT to present a query interface to the user for retrieving principals.
Marshalling:
The request body MUST be an empty DAV:principal-search-property-set XML element.
The response body MUST bea DAV:principal-search-property-set XML element, containing a DAV:principal-search-property XML element for each property that may be searched with the DAV:principal-property-search REPORT. A server MAY limit its response to just a subset of the searchable properties, such as those likely to be useful to an interactive access control client.
<!ELEMENT principal-search-property-set (principal-search-property*) >
Each DAV:principal-search-property XML element contains exactly one searchable property, and a description of the property.
<!ELEMENT principal-search-property (prop, description) >
The DAV:prop element contains one principal property on which the server is able to perform a DAV:principal-property-search REPORT.
prop: see RFC 2518, Section 12.11
The description element is a human-readable description of what information this property represents. Servers MUST indicate the human language of the description using the xml:lang attribute and SHOULD consider the HTTP Accept-Language request header when selecting one of multiple available languages.
<!ELEMENT description #PCDATA >
In this example, the client determines the set of searchable principal properties by requesting the DAV:principal-search-property-set REPORT on the root of the server's principal URL collection set, identified by http://www.BigCorp.com/users/.
>>
Request <<
REPORT /users/ HTTP/1.1
Host: www.BigCorp.com
Content-Type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
Accept-Language: en, de
Authorization: BASIC d2FubmFtYWs6cGFzc3dvcmQ=
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:principal-search-property-set xmlns:D="DAV:"/>
>>
Response <<
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/xml; charset="utf-8"
Content-Length: xxx
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<D:principal-search-property-set xmlns:D="DAV:">
<D:principal-search-property>
<D:prop>
<D:displayname/>
</D:prop>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Full name</D:description>
</D:principal-search-property>
<D:principal-search-property>
<D:prop xmlns:B="http://BigCorp.com/ns/">
<B:title/>
</D:prop>
<D:description xml:lang="en">Job title</D:description>
</D:principal-search-property>
</D:principal-search-property-set>
Implementations of this
specification MUST support the XML element ignore rule, as specified in Section
23.3.2 of [RFC2518], and the XML Namespacerecommendation [REC-XML-NAMES].
Note that use of the DAV namespace
is reserved for XML elements and property names defined in a standards-track or
Experimental IETF RFC.
In this specification, the only human-readable content can be found in the description XML element, found within the DAV:supported-privilege-set property. This element contains a human-readable description of the capabilities controlled by a privilege. As a result, the description element must be capable of representing descriptions in multiple character sets. Since the description element is found within a WebDAV property, it is represented on-the-wire as XML [REC-XML], and hence can leverage XML's language tagging and character set encoding capabilities. Specifically, XML processors must, at minimum, be able to read XML elements encoded using the UTF-8 [UTF-8] encoding of the ISO 10646 multilingual plane. XML examples in this specification demonstrate use of the charset parameter of the Content-Type header, as defined in [RFC3023], as well as the XML "encoding" attribute, which together provide charset identification information for MIME and XML processors. Futhermore, this specification requires server implementations to tag description fields with the xml:lang attribute (see Section 2.12 of [REC-XML]), which specifies the human language of the description. Additionally, server implementations should take into account the value of the Accept-Language HTTP header to determine which description string to return.
For XML elements other than the description element, it is expected that implementations will treat the property names, privilege names, and values as tokens, and convert these tokens into human-readable text in the user's language and character set when displayed to a person. Only a generic WebDAV property display utility would display these values in their raw form to a human user.
For error reporting, we follow the convention of HTTP/1.1 status codes, including with each status code a short, English description of the code (e.g., 200 (OK)). While the possibility exists that a poorly crafted user agent would display this message to a user, internationalized applications will ignore this message, and display an appropriate message in the user's language and character set.
Further internationalization considerations for this protocol are described in the WebDAV Distributed Authoring protocol specification [RFC2518].
Applications and users of this access control protocol should be aware of several security considerations, detailed below. In addition to the discussion in this document, the security considerations detailed in the HTTP/1.1 specification [RFC2616], the WebDAV Distributed Authoring Protocol specification [RFC2518], and the XML Media Types specification [RFC3023] should be considered in a security analysis of this protocol.
In the absence of a mechanism for remotely manipulating access control lists, if a single user's authentication credentials are compromised, only those resources for which the user has access permission can be read, modified, moved, or deleted. With the introduction of this access control protocol, if a single compromised user has the ability to change ACLs for a broad range of other users (e.g., a super-user), the number of resources that could be altered by a single compromised user increases. This risk can be mitigated by limiting the number of people who have write-acl privileges across a broad range of resources.
The ability to read the access privileges (stored in the DAV:acl property), or the privileges permitted the currently authenticated user (stored in the DAV:current-user-privilege-set property) on a resource may seem innocuous, since reading an ACL cannot possibly affect the resource's state. However, if all resources have world-readable ACLs, it is possible to perform an exhaustive search for those resources that have inadvertently left themselves in a vulnerable state, such as being world-writeable. In particular, the property retrieval method PROPFIND, executed with Depth infinity on an entire hierarchy, is a very efficient way to retrieve the DAV:acl or DAV:current-user-privilege-set properties. Once found, this vulnerability can be exploited by a denial of service attack in which the open resource is repeatedly overwritten. Alternately, writeable resources can be modified in undesirable ways.
To reduce this risk, read-acl privileges should not be granted to unauthenticated principals, and restrictions on read-acl and read-current-user-privilege-set privileges for authenticated principals should be carefully analyzed when deploying this protocol. Access to the current-user-privilege-set property will involve a tradeoff of usability versus security. When the current-user-privilege-set is visible, user interfaces are expected to provide enhanced information concerning permitted and restricted operations, yet this information may also indicate a vulnerability that could be exploited. Deployment of this protocol will need to evaluate this tradeoff in light of the requirements of the deployment environment.
In an effort to reduce protocol complexity, this protocol specification intentionally does not address the issue of how to manage or discover the initial ACL that is placed upon a resource when it is created. The only way to discover the initial ACL is to create a new resource, then retrieve the value of the DAV:acl property. This assumes the principal creating the resource also has been granted the DAV:read-acl privilege.
As a result, it is possible that a principal could create a resource, and then discover that its ACL grants privileges that are undesirable. Furthermore, this protocol makes it possible (though unlikely) that the creating principal could be unable to modify the ACL, or even delete the resource. Even when the ACL can be modified, there will be a short period of time when the resource exists with the initial ACL before its new ACL can be set.
Several
factors mitigate this risk. Human principals are often aware of the default
access permissions in their editing environments and take this into account
when writing information. Furthermore, default privilege policies are usually
very conservative, limiting the privileges granted by the initial ACL.
Authentication mechanisms defined for use with HTTP and WebDAV also apply to this WebDAV Access Control Protocol, in particular the Basic and Digest authentication mechanisms defined in [RFC2617].
This document uses the namespace defined by [RFC2518] for XML elements. All other IANA considerations mentioned in [RFC2518] also applicable to WebDAV ACL.
The following notice is copied from RFC 2026, section 10.4, and describes the position of the IETF concerning intellectual property claims made against this document.
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to pertain to the implementation or use other technology described in this document or the extent to which any license under such rights might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on the IETF's procedures with respect to rights in standards-track and standards-related documentation can be found in BCP-11. Copies of claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can be obtained from the IETF Secretariat.
The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary rights that may cover technology that may be required to practice this standard. Please address the information to the IETF Executive Director.
This protocol is the collaborative product of the WebDAV ACL design team: Bernard Chester, Geoff Clemm, Anne Hopkins, Barry Lind, Sean Lyndersay, Eric Sedlar, Greg Stein, and Jim Whitehead. The authors are grateful for the detailed review and comments provided by Jim Amsden, Gino Basso, Murthy Chintalapati, Dennis Hamilton, Laurie Harper, Ron Jacobs, Chris Knight, Remy Maucherat, Larry Masinter, Yaron Goland, Lisa Dusseault, Joe Orton, Stefan Eissing, Julian Reschke, Keith Wannamaker, Tim Ellison, Peter Raymond, and Dylan Barrell. We thank Keith Wannamaker for the initial text of the principal property search sections. Prior work on WebDAV access control protocols has been performed by Yaron Goland, Paul Leach, Lisa Dusseault, Howard Palmer, and Jon Radoff. We would like to acknowledge the foundation laid for us by the authors of the DeltaV, WebDAV and HTTP protocols upon which this protocol is layered, and the invaluable feedback from the WebDAV working group.
[RFC2119] S.Bradner, "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels." RFC 2119, BCP 14, March, 1997.
[REC-XML] T. Bray, J. Paoli, C.M. Sperberg-McQueen, "Extensible Markup Language (XML)." World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-xml.http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml
[REC-XML-NAMES] T. Bray, D. Hollander, A. Layman, "Name Spaces in XML" World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-xml-names. http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names/
[RFC3253] G. Clemm, J. Amsden, T. Ellison, C. Kaler, J. Whitehead, "Versioning Extensions to WebDAV." RFC 3253, March 2002.
[REC-XML-INFOSET] J. Cowan, R. Tobin, "XML Information Set." World Wide Web Consortium Recommendation REC-xml-infoset. http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-infoset/
[RFC2616] R. Fielding, J. Gettys, J. C. Mogul, H. Frystyk, L. Masinter, P. Leach, and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1." RFC 2616, June, 1999.
[RFC2617] J. Franks, P. Hallam-Baker, J. Hostetler, S. Lawrence, P. Leach, A. Luotonen, L. Stewart, "HTTP Authentication: Basic and Digest Access Authentication." RFC 2617, June, 1999.
[RFC2518] Y. Goland, E. Whitehead, A. Faizi, S. R. Carter, D. Jensen, "HTTP Extensions for Distributed Authoring -- WEBDAV." RFC 2518, February, 1999.
[RFC2368] P. Hoffman, L. Masinter, J. Zawinski, "The mailto URL scheme." RFC 2368, July, 1998.
[RFC3023] M. Murata, S. St.Laurent, D. Kohn, "XML Media Types." RFC 3023, January, 2001.
[UTF-8] F. Yergeau, "UTF-8, a transformation format of Unicode and ISO 10646." RFC 2279, January, 1998.
[RFC2026] S.Bradner, "The Internet Standards Process - Revision 3." RFC 2026, BCP 9. Harvard, October, 1996.
[RFC2255] T. Howes, M. Smith, "The LDAP URL Format." RFC 2255. Netscape, December, 1997.
[RFC2251] M. Wahl, T. Howes, S. Kille, "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (v3)." RFC 2251. Critical Angle, Netscape, Isode, December, 1997.
[CaseMap] M. Davis, "Case Mappings", Unicode Standard Annex #21, March 26, 2001. http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr21
Geoffrey Clemm
Rational Software
20 Maguire Road
Lexington, MA 02421
Email: geoffrey.clemm@rational.com
Anne Hopkins
Microsoft Corporation
One Microsoft Way
Redmond, WA 98052
Email: annehop@microsoft.com
Eric Sedlar
Oracle Corporation
500 Oracle Parkway
Redwood Shores, CA 94065
Email: esedlar@us.oracle.com
Jim Whitehead
U.C. Santa Cruz
Dept. of Computer Science
Baskin Engineering
1156 High Street
Santa Cruz, CA 95064
Email: ejw@cse.ucsc.edu
All XML elements defined in this Document Type Definition (DTD) belong to the DAV namespace. This DTD should be viewed as an addendum to the DTD provided in [RFC2518], section 23.1.
<!-- Privileges -->
<!ELEMENT read EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT write EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT write-properties EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT
write-content EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT
unlock EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT read-acl EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT read-current-user-privilege-set EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT write-acl EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT all EMPTY>
<!-- Principal Properties (Section 4) -->
<!ELEMENT principal EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT alternate-URI-set (href*)>
<!ELEMENT principal-URL (href)>
<!ELEMENT group-membership (href*)>
<!-- Access Control Properties (Section 5) -->
<!-- DAV:owner Property (Section 5.1) -->
<!ELEMENT owner (href prop?)>
<!ELEMENT prop (see [RFC2518], section 12.11)>
<!-- DAV:supported-privilege-set Property (Section 5.2) -->
<!ELEMENT supported-privilege-set (supported-privilege*)>
<!ELEMENT supported-privilege
(privilege, abstract?, description, supported-privilege*)>
<!ELEMENT privilege ANY>
<!ELEMENT abstract EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT description #PCDATA>
<!ELEMENT privilege ANY>
<!--
DAV:current-user-privilege-set Property (Section 5.3) -->
<!ELEMENT current-user-privilege-set (privilege*)>
<!-- DAV:acl Property (Section 5.4) -->
<!ELEMENT acl (ace | inherited-acl)* >
<!ELEMENT inherited-acl (href)>
<!ELEMENT ace (invert | principal, (grant|deny), protected?, inherited?)>
<!ELEMENT invert principal>
<!ELEMENT inherited-acl (href)>
<!ELEMENT principal ((href, prop?)
| all | authenticated | unauthenticated
| property | self)>
<!ELEMENT prop (see [RFC2518], section 12.11)>
<!ELEMENT all EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT authenticated EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT unauthenticated EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT property ANY>
<!ELEMENT self EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT grant (privilege+)>
<!ELEMENT deny (privilege+)>
<!ELEMENT privilege ANY>
<!ELEMENT protected EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT inherited (href)>
<!-- DAV:principal-collection-set Property (Section 5.7) -->
<!ELEMENT principal-collection-set (href*)>
<!-- DAV:acl-semantics Property (Section 6) -->
<!ELEMENT acl-semantics (ace-combination?, ace-ordering?, allowed-ace?, required-principal?)>
<!ELEMENT ace-combination
(first-match | all-grant-before-any-deny | specific-deny-overrides-grant)>
<!ELEMENT first-match EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT all-grant-before-any-deny EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT specific-deny-overrides-grant EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT ace-ordering (deny-before-grant)? >
<!ELEMENT deny-before-grant EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT allowed-ace (principal-only-one-ace | grant-only |
no-invert | no-acl-inherit)*>
<!ELEMENT principal-only-one-ace EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT grant-only EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT no-invert EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT no-acl-inherit EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT required-principal
(all? | authenticated? | unauthenticated? | self? | href* |property*)>
<!-- ACL method preconditions (Section 8.1.1) -->
<!ELEMENT
no-ace-conflict EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT
no-protected-ace-conflict EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT
no-inherited-ace-conflict EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT
limited-number-of-aces EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT
no-abstract EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT
not-supported-privilege EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT
missing-required-principal EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT
recognized-principal EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT
allowed-principal EMPTY>
<!-- REPORTs (Section 9) -->
<!ELEMENT acl-principal-prop-set ANY>
ANY value: a sequence of one or more elements, with at most one DAV:prop element.
<!ELEMENT principal-match ((principal-property | self), prop?)>
<!ELEMENT principal-property ANY>
ANY value: an element whose value identifies a property. The expectation is the value of the named property typically contains an href element that contains the URI of a principal
<!ELEMENT self EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT principal-property-search ((property-search+), prop?) >
<!ELEMENT property-search (prop, substring, caseless?) >
<!ELEMENT substring #PCDATA >
<!ELEMENT caseless EMPTY>
<!ELEMENT non-searchable-property (prop) >
<!ELEMENT principal-search-property-set (principal-search-property*) >
<!ELEMENT principal-search-property (prop, description) >